Head to Marigold Station, the end of the line

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A player-created Guide is available for this content: A Church in the Wild (Guide)
A player-created Guide is available for this content: Marigold Station (Guide)

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Marigold.png
Spoiler warning!
This page contains details about Fallen London Actions.

From: All aboard!, Boarding Again (Ealing Gardens), Returning Home, A Return Journey, Returning East – or Further West, Boarding Again (Station VIII), Boarding Again (Burrow-Infra-Mump), Boarding Again (Moulin) or Boarding Again (The Hurlers)


Where the Great Hellbound Railway meets the Devils' own lines.

Unlocked with Involved in a Railway Venture 130


Challenge information

Broad, Dangerous 450

  • 308 - very chancy (41%)
  • 383 - chancy (51%)
  • 458 - modest (61%)
  • 533 - very modest (71%)
  • 608 - low-risk (81%)
  • 683 - straightforward (91%)
  • 750 - straightforward (100%)

Difficulty is (( Seeing Banditry in the Upper River - Train Defences)
and additional difficulty, as below

Success

Arrival

Description summary:
Description varies with Seeing Banditry in the Upper River. Travelling from London uses text from the first table, while all the other stations use the second set.

BanditryDescription
0This stretch of track is perfectly safe: no one tries to hold up the train, or put a claw through the windows.
1This part of the track is safe most of the time – and so it proves on this occasion. None of the passengers try to pick your pocket or start a fight; nothing outside the train mounts an attack.
2This part of the track is safe most of the time – and so it proves on this occasion. One other passenger eyes your pocket, but you stare at her until she realises you are not the target for a wise criminal.
3This territory is perhaps less wild than it used to be, but it is still not as safe as the Railway's posters like to suggest. It is sheer good fortune that you don't run into any trouble on your journey.
4Whatever the Railway's promotions may claim, this is not tame territory. "Lucky journey this time," the conductor remarks, and kisses an amulet shaped like a thistle.
5At one point, the engine slows to a crawl. Something thumps repeatedly against the outside of your carriage. The window cracks. Then the engineer pours on the coal – or perhaps some other, more effective fuel – and the train flies forward again […]
6The western Neath has a reputation for being empty. You do not find it so today. Dozens of would-be train robbers gather at a narrow point in the track and pelt […] the train. The engineer […] speeds through. But this could have ended very differently.
7 - 8[…] On the track ahead is a cloaked man riding a huge, tusked creature: […] Its eyes are lamps; its hooves are sledgehammers.

[…] you manage to wound the thing – hanging out the window, aiming in the dark – and it falls back. […]

BanditryDescription
0The journey is a stop-start one, giving the impression that you're on a new-fangled exercise device […] When you enquire of the driver […] he blames slippery tracks due to fungus. […] Why they can't factor it into their railway planning is beyond you.
1The journey is a stop-start one, giving the impression that you're on a […] participatory attraction at Mrs Plenty's carnival. The motion induces nausea. The bandit who boarded the train […] suffered far worse – a sudden jolt launched him into a door […]
2The driver has the engine rattling and shaking at top speed down the track. The signals must all be in your favour. The alternative is that the driver progressed oblivious to them […] keen not to waste a moment's drinking at his local.
3The driver has the engine rattling and shaking at top speed down the track. The signals must all be in your favour. The alternative is that the driver ignored them entirely. He drives like a man who has seen what terrors await if the train slows, […]
4Terror-Birds on the line! […] After London went through a fad for hatching incomprehensible beasts, there was rise in abandoned pets […]

The rejected birds […] roam the suburbs of London in aggressively curious packs. […] these […] shriek indignation at the engine […]

5Terror-Birds on the line! […]

The rejected birds are far from defenceless […] These took curious bites from the train's trim, but did no significant damage to either its workings, or the passengers inside. The birds must have been in a whimsical mood.

6The train lurches from one threat to the next: Terror-Birds! Badly lain rails! Bandits lurking at every corner! […] The conductor fends off the bandits with a spear […] The driver puts on a well-timed burst of speed as soon as the engine exits the bend. […]
7 - 8The train lurches from one threat to the next: Terror-Birds! Badly lain rails! Bandits lurking at every corner! […] a figure looms in the darkness. It is twice the height of the train, and possessing far too many arms. There is a sound of swarming bees […]

[Find the rest of the story at https://www.fallenlondon.com]

If leaving Burrow-Infra-Mump:


Failure

Arrival

Description summary:
Description varies with Seeing Banditry in the Upper River. Travelling from London uses text from the first table, while all the other stations use the second set.

BanditryDescription
0 - 1This stretch of track is supposed to be perfectly safe: attacks are fewer than they used to be, and the criminals less bold. But that doesn't protect against the passengers themselves. One decides to indulge in a bit of recreational robbery. […]
2The land outside the train offers only twilight, and no particular threat. It's the honey-mazed woman […] next to you that proves difficult, thrashing and screaming about panthers and the dome. You compel her to be still, but she scratches your face.
3The land outside the train offers only twilight, and no particular threat. One of your fellow passengers, on the other hand, is transporting a Python-Headed hound. "Bred it myself," he tells you, just before it exhibits its fangs.
4At one point, the engine slows to a crawl. Something thumps repeatedly against the outside of your carriage. The window cracks. A scaled arm reaches through the open portal. You are quick enough to cut it off; not quick enough to avoid being wounded.
5[…] the engine slows to a crawl. Something thumps repeatedly against the outside of your carriage. The window cracks, then explodes inward. Several leather-clad attackers come through – two human, one Clay. You and the conductor manage to fight them off […]
6The western Neath has a reputation for being empty. You do not find it so today. Dozens of would-be train robbers […] pelt the side of the train. The engineer is new to his job […] He stops, and in a moment the ruffians are aboard […]
7 - 8The train comes to a stop not half an hour out of Moloch station. On the track ahead is a cloaked man riding a huge, tusked creature […]

It stamps, terribly, on the roof of the carriage, crumpling the metal and driving a piece of metal into your side. […]

BanditryDescription
0The journey is a stop-start one, giving the impression that you're on a new-fangled exercise device […] Your back will ache for weeks. […] the driver […] blames obstacles set up by criminals. You, however, see no evidence of these.
1The journey is a stop-start one […] The bandit who boarded the train as it slowed to take a curve was unaccustomed […] – a sudden jolt launched him towards you. When your heads collided, he fell unconscious. But you've a bruise the size of a Whitsun egg.
2The driver has the engine rattling and shaking at top speed […] He drives like a man who has already clocked off, keen not to waste a moment's drinking […] with a scream of the brakes, the motion abruptly halts. You are slammed against a carriage door. […]
3The driver […] drives like a man who has seen what terrors await if the train slows […]

A 'passenger' – […] a bandit armed to the teeth – had hacked away at the coupling. Your intervention prevented greater loss, but he didn't go down without a fight.

4A pack of Terror-Birds loiters on the line […]

One puts its head through an open window and consumes a matron's hat. Another bites a hole at shoulder height and takes a chunk from your arm. […] neither finds their meal particularly palatable.

5The train lurches to a stop. The conductor runs, screaming, through the corridor. A Terror-Birds scampers, screeching, after him. The birds have been observing bandits, and have learned how both to block the line and break into carriages. […]
6[…] a pack of bandits […] leaps aboard. The conductor tries to fend them off […] but he is merely tugged from the train […] The bandits pass through the carriages unimpeded, gathering valuables and challenging anyone who looks like they might resist.
7 - 8[…] a figure looms in the darkness. It is twice the height of the train, and possesses far too many arms. There is a sound of swarming bees […] The swarming intensifies, overwhelming you. Your ears still ring when you regain consciousness at the station.

[Find the rest of the story at https://www.fallenlondon.com]

If leaving Burrow-Infra-Mump: